Globalist billionaire Gates warns of ‘more brutal’ pandemic
Bill Gates Monday warned that a new pandemic is afoot which may be “man-made” and “far more brutal," according to the Daily Mail.
The billionaire made the remarks during a speech at the Lowery Institute think tank in Sydney where he admonished countries for not being prepared enough for COVID-19.
“Compare the economic cost of being prepared for the next one to the cost of this one, over $10 trillion economic loss,” said Gates. “With the pandemic we were foolish not to have the tools, the practice and global capacity to be on standby like we do with fire or earthquakes,” he added.
Gates blamed the failed response in part on “a particularly dangerous form of populism” whose connection to US healthcare is “a bit concerning”.
However, he praised Australia for its response to the pandemic — particularly its quarantine decrees — which he said “kept the level of infection low.”
“Some of the things that stand out are that Australia and about seven other countries did population scale diagnostics early on and had quarantine policies,” he said. “That meant you kept the level of infection low in that first year when there were no vaccines.”
To enforce quarantines, the Australian government developed a mobile app which would randomly contact people ordered to quarantine to provide proof of their location within 15 minutes. If they failed to do so, the app would automatically notify the police who would then send officers to the person’s home.
The vaccine investor urged countries to form a globalist response to the next pandemic under the World Health Organization (WHO). Significantly, the WHO counts the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation as its second largest donor after the United States. All countries should be forced under the WHO umbrella, said Gates, who suggested that those who refuse could be “the source of the next pandemic.”
“You need a global group that’s kind of scoring everybody and saying, ‘Hey, if you’re not participating in this you could be the source of the next pandemic and that’s bad for the entire world.'”
When asked why the WHO was roundly criticized for its pandemic response, Gates explained that the organization was “mistreated by the US and other countries” which made it “very hard to do your job in the middle of a pandemic.”
The Microsoft founder suggested that a medical product is already being developed for the next pandemic which will be inhaled.
“We think we can also have very early in the pandemic a thing you can inhale that will mean you can’t be infected – a blocker, an inhaled blocker,” he said.
In addition to praising Australia, Gates waxed lyrical about China and warned the US not to be too hostile towards the communist country.
“I see China's rise as a huge win for the world. . . . [T]he current mentality of the US to China, and which is reciprocated, is kind of a lose-lose mentality. That could be very self-fulfilling in a very negative way.”
In October, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation co-hosted a pandemic simulation exercise named Catastrophic Contagion. The simulation was attended by Bill Gates himself along with 13 other participants, including senior public health officials from Senegal, Rwanda, Nigeria, Angola, Liberia, Singapore, India and Germany.
Participants had to react to a fictional pandemic set in the future which originated in a certain point of the globe and spread around the world. Unlike COVID-19, which in the main was not a threat to children and young people, Catastrophic Contagion engineered a pandemic that was more lethal and targeted those populations specifically.
The event drew similarities to the now-infamous Event 201, a pandemic simulation exercise in October 2019 co-hosted by the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and the World Economic Forum. The “fictional” pandemic presented for Event 201 exactly outlined the COVID-19 pandemic — down to the very name. It differed mainly in the origin of the virus. The virus was first identified two months later in Wuhan, China.